Monday, May 18, 2009

Torah u'Madda - The Wrong Term?

Here is a letter that I received from a colleague regarding my "In Defense Of My Opponents: Postscript":

I was just catching up a little on what's been going on on the internet in the past several months. I read your truly excellent postscript, and I have an opinion to offer. Do not use the term Torah Umadda.

Torah Umadda (TU) is a loaded term. Many people who identify as being to the right of Yeshiva University but who have no problem with your ideas would viscerally, and sometimes not just viscerally, react negatively to the term TU, which they would not construe to mean whatever exactly you mean by it. Furthermore, and no less significantly, to many Y.U. undergraduates, semicha students, alumni and rashei yeshiva, TU connotes an ideology and/or an ideological and sociological subgroup to which they are opposed more or less definitely. Many, many people who are or have been affiliated with Y.U. get wary and uncomfortable when the term TU is thrown about. It comes with all sorts of baggage.

Part of the problem is that it's ambiguous. I have never read Rabbi Dr. Norman Lamm's book entitled TU, but apparently he presents numerous different possible meanings of it. My perception is that many people who claim to espouse the ideology don't really have a clear idea of what they're espousing. They're passionately supportive of TU because they perceive it to be an ideology that encompasses (and, hence, justifies) their own personal and independently held beliefs; not because they can articulate what the ideology actually is and adhere to the ideology. The ideology, rather, adheres to them.

To many, TU suggests the view that study of Torah and of secular wisdom are both so essential to the religious life of the modern Jew that there is some ambiguity as to whether one is more highly valued than the other. I doubt you intend anything like that when you use the term, but rest assured, some will so construe it.

I believe that perhaps the most crucial flashpoint with regard to TU is that many who espouse it believe, consciously or unwittingly, not only that both Torah study and study of secular wisdom are important to pursue, and that both ought to inform our understanding of the world, but that Torah, on the one hand, and secular wisdom (and, often, "modernity"), on the other, are sources of values. These values can come into conflict, and if they do, it is not always obvious that the values dictated by Torah trump those dictated by Madda. This is not a position I hold; I think it is fundamentally incompatible with Judaism. I think there are many people at Y.U. who share both this understanding of TU and my objection to it. All of those people will be more or less alienated by your use of it. It goes without saying that those to the right of Y.U. will feel disenfranchised.

An additional reason not to use the term, in my view, is that it is most definitely associated with an institution. TU is Y.U.'s motto. It is on their logo, their stationery, their publicity and press releases, and at their events. Y.U. is a fine institution, but it's quite limiting, indeed pigeon-holing, to present the ideological gulf in Judaism today as existing between Chareidi society and Yeshiva University, which is, effectively, what many people will understand if you use the term TU.

Those are my thoughts. And, by the way, I agree very much with your analysis of the ideological state of today's orthodox Jewish world. I find the word "epistemology" (Oxford: the theory of knowledge, esp. with regard to its methods and validation) very useful in discussing it. I think much of the intellectual disparity between the different camps boils down to differences in epistemology: different groups start off with different fundamental axioms from which they derive the rest of their knowledge. If you start from the axiomatic premise that everything in Tanach and the Talmud must be true, you will arrive at one set of conclusions. If you start instead with the base axiom that human reason is the path to knowledge, some of your conclusions will differ from those in the first set. (This does not preclude your believing Tanach and/or the Talmud to be invariably or almost invariably reliable sources of information.) I find it useful on occasion to engage in discussion -- or debate -- with someone whose epistemology differs from my own, not because I think I can convince him to arrive at my conclusions using his epistemology, but to demonstrate to him either (a) that his epistemology is inconsistent or otherwise flawed, or (b) that I believe what I believe not because I am incorrectly applying the axioms he has assumed everyone applies, but because I have, in fact, a different set of axioms -- which he must persuade me to abandon if he wishes to convince me of his position. It is usually illuminating for someone to identify the fundamental source of his disagreement with another, and, as you say, it can often ease tension and increase understanding, if not consensus.

5 comments:

  1. I do not believe that the term Torah uMadda can be, practically speaking, extracted from the (albeit tentative/exploratory) presentation given by Rabbi Lamm in his work Torah uMadda.

    The work presents six "models" to choose from. Insofar as three of them are historical models, the proponants of which may very well object to some of the others, I'm not sure the usefulness of an umbrella term covering them.

    Among the three hypothetical models the preferred one is the so-called Chassidic model which functions by (what appears to me to be) an advanced notion of the Arizal's kavanahs but is presented as a simple mental condition, in contradiction to very explicit and well known chassidic texts.

    Another model posits that Madda can be considered, ala Rambam, as Torah in a sense when studied with such an intent, albeit on a lower level in the heiarchy of Torah. While many supporters have taken offense at the criticism that he equated madda with Torah, he does present viewing madda as a type of Torah as an option to consider. This, breifly, seems to ignore the fact that the Rambam ossured reading Madda on Shabbos.

    As a rule the work seems to conflate any mention of secular studies in the sources with the broad definition of Madda being supported, while at the same time not dealing with the very real halachic restrictions.

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  2. "It is usually illuminating for someone to identify the fundamental source of his disagreement with another, and, as you say, it can often ease tension and increase understanding, if not consensus."

    This is the concept of "Nekudas Hamachalokes". I once read that the Chafetz Chaim(IIRC) took two seforim of different sizes, and put them on top of each other, to symbolize in the overlap, the difference between the hava amina and the maskana of the gemera.

    I am first interested in laying all the issues on the table, even if that means buiding up a strong case for the other side. Once there is clarity, then I can see if there is an acceptable answer from both the point of Torah and another discipline, or, to what extent there is no answer to satisfy both, and one has to rely on faith. I am more interested in what the issues are than what is a finalized answer.

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  3. Having read Rav Lamm's book and other information on the subject, I can confidently say that the problem with the term "Torah U'Maddah" (TuM, by the way) is that it has no definition! Rav Lamm can't even come to a definitive conclusion in his work on the subject. The closest I can get to a working definition is "It's what the Rav believed in". And that is?

    This is unlike Torah Im Derech Eretz (TIDE) which is quite well defined by its founder, Rav SR Hirsch, zt"l.

    I sometimes suspect that TuM is being used today as a rallying flag for all those who identify as Modern Orthodox but want to have a label for their personal haskafos.

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  4. I don't understand this post. What is the problem, that people object? Have we become all a little hypersensitive or put differently, do we take ourselves and our religiosity too seriously? Have we all become a little too concerned with what the Haredim will say, as if they are parents whose approval we seek. All the sociological terms for frum groups are vague. What's Haredi? Torah Im Derech Eretz is the least vague because it was defined by one man who wrote prolifically. Even there there's debate. You people have to go to relax.

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  5. First the author says

    'I think there are many people at Y.U. who share both this understanding of TU and my objection to it'

    and then the author says

    An additional reason not to use the term, in my view, is that it is most definitely associated with an institution. TU is Y.U.'s motto. It is on their logo, their stationery, their publicity and press releases, and at their events. Y.U. is a fine institution, but it's quite limiting, indeed pigeon-holing, to present the ideological gulf in Judaism today as existing between Chareidi society and Yeshiva University, which is, effectively, what many people will understand if you use the term TU.

    I conclude that these two statements are highly incompatible. YU is very much based on TU. If so, how on earth can it possibly have many students who oppose the very ideology for which it stands? If they truly do understand it as holding T and U in equal esteem, how can they possibly attend an institution that so proudly promotes t?

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